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The overlooked role of Cr(VI) in micropollutant degradation under solar light irradiation.

Authors :
Yang, Tao
Huang, Cui
An, Linqian
Zeng, Ge
Li, Juan
Liu, Changyu
Xu, Xiaolong
Jia, Jianbo
Ma, Jun
Source :
Water Research. Aug2023, Vol. 242, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

• The irradiation of Cr(VI) by solar light effectively degraded various micropollutants. • OH was the major reactive species contributing to micropollutant degradation in the solar light/Cr(VI) system. • Cr(V) was determined as the important intermediate of •OH formation. • The natural solar light/Cr(VI) system showed great potential for micropollutant degradation. Hexavalent chromium (Cr(VI)) is ubiquitous in natural environments, whereas its role in the transformation of coexisting contaminants may have been overlooked. In this work, it was reported for the first time that the irradiation of Cr(VI) by solar light (solar light/Cr(VI) system) could effectively degrade various micropollutants with different structures. The removal efficiency of selected micropollutants was increased by 13.3–64.8% by the solar light/Cr(VI) system compared to that by direct solar photolysis. Meanwhile, the oxidation rates were enhanced by 2.2–21.5 folds, while they were negligible by Cr(VI) oxidation alone. Experiments by specific scavengers, probe compounds, fluorescence absorbance, and electron spin resonance analysis demonstrated that hydroxyl radical (•OH) was the major reactive species in the solar light/Cr(VI) system. Further experiments showed that the generation of •OH was closely related to the intermediate Cr(V) generated from Cr(VI) reduction, and Cr(V) could be re-oxidized back to Cr(VI). Increasing solution pH negatively affected model micropollutant (carbamazepine (CBZ)) degradation by the solar light/Cr(VI) system, mainly due to the decreased quantum yield of •OH at higher pH. Coexisting sulfate ions showed negligible effect on CBZ degradation in the solar light/Cr(VI) system, while the presence of bicarbonate, chloride, and humic acid inhibited CBZ degradation to varying degrees, owing to their diverse scavenging effects on •OH. Furthermore, moderate CBZ degradation was also achieved by natural solar light photolysis of Cr(VI). This study demonstrated the pivotal role of Cr(VI) in the transformation of micropollutants under solar irradiation, which advances the understanding of the fate of micropollutants in natural environments. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00431354
Volume :
242
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Water Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
169873303
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2023.120309